Valerie Spruill |
“It
is devastating. It can destroy you,” Valerie Spruill, 60, told CNN of learning
eight years ago that she had been married to her father. A DNA test using hair
from the late Percy Spruill’s brush confirmed the shocking news.
Valerie
Spruill lived silently with the secret until this month, when she gave an
interview to the Akron Beacon Journal to try and help others dealing with
similar circumstances.
“I
want this to be more of an inspirational story,” the 60-year-old told the
newspaper. “If I’ve come through this, anyone can come through anything through
the help of the Lord.”
Spruill,
who lives in Doylestown, Ohio, says other members of her family knew the dark
secret long before the news was revealed to her.
Whether
her husband ever knew “I don’t know,” she told CNN. “That conversation didn’t
come up … I think if he did know, there is no way he could have told me.”
Percy
Spruill died in 1998 at the age of 60. The pair had been married for several
years.
It
was Valerie Spruill’s second marriage. She had three children with her first
husband when she met Percy in Akron, Ohio, she told CNN. They did not have
children.
“We
had a good life,” she said.
Family
members had long figured out the ordeal. After years of enduring silent
whispers, it was Spruill’s uncle who finally told her.
Since
then, she’s suffered numerous health problems, including two strokes and diabetes.
She believes they were linked to living with the dark secret.
“Pain
and stress will kill, and I had to release my stress,” Spruill said. “I’m just
telling the story to release my pain.”
Spruill
told the paper that her mother was just 15 when she first met Percy. It remains
unclear how many children they had or how long they were together, though
Valerie says she is aware of six brothers.
Spruill’s
family had a history of keeping secrets. At only 3 months old, Valerie Spruill
was given to her maternal grandparents, but knew them as her parents until she
was 8 or 9 years old, according to the paper.
That’s
when she learned that the woman who frequently stopped by the house wasn’t just
a family friend, but her mother, Christine.
Her
mother, a “lady of the night,” died in 1984.
Spruill,
who is now retired with eight grandchildren, thinks all people should know the
truth about their families.
“”It
needs to be told, because children need to know where they come from,” Valerie
Spruill told the Beacon—Journal. “And I know it hurts, because I have been
devastated by this.”
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